Exams and Tests
If you see your health professional for pelvic pain or bleeding,
you'll be checked for a number of conditions, including an
ovarian cyst, that may be causing your symptoms. Your
evaluation will include a
pelvic exam, a history of your symptoms and menstrual
periods, a family history, and a
transvaginal ultrasound (which uses a narrow wand
placed in the vagina). See an illustration of
ovarian
cysts
.
If your health professional discovers an ovarian cyst during a
routine pelvic exam, a transvaginal ultrasound can help show what kind of cyst
it is.
When is further testing necessary?
If an ultrasound shows that you have a fluid-filled functional
ovarian cyst, and it isn't causing you severe pain, your health professional
will probably suggest a watchful waiting period. You can then have the cyst
checked 6 to 8 weeks later to see whether it is changing in size. Most cysts go
away without treatment in 1 to 2 months or after 1 to 2 menstrual
periods.3
Your health professional will recommend further testing or
treatment if:
- Initial ultrasound doesn't clearly show what
kind of cyst or growth is present, or both ovaries are
affected.
- You are not ovulating during your initial examination
(because you are either a
postmenopausal woman or a girl not yet menstruating).
Without ovulation, a new functional cyst would be highly unlikely, so other
possible conditions are explored.
- You develop moderate to severe
pain or vaginal bleeding.
- A diagnosed functional ovarian cyst does
not get smaller or go away in 2 to 3 months.
- An ovarian growth or
cyst (mass) is larger than
3 in. (7.6 cm).
- You have
risk factors for ovarian cancer. The higher your risk
of ovarian cancer, the more likely aggressive testing will be recommended to
determine the cause of an ovarian mass.
Further testing
- Laparoscopy
allows a surgeon to look at the ovary through a lighted viewing instrument and
take a sample of the growth (biopsy). After testing the sample, the surgeon can
decide whether to surgically remove the cyst (cystectomy) or the entire ovary
(oophorectomy).
- CA-125 (cancer antigen) test is only
recommended for women with a very high risk for ovarian cancer—these are women
with a significant family history of the disease. This blood test result is
combined with ultrasound results, because it doesn't give a highly dependable
diagnosis on its own.